Phil And John: The Derby duo with built in grassroots appeal

It took four journos (Fran James, Gavin Drake, Tony Cummings and
Jonathan Day), three interviews and a couple of years to piece
together a Phil And
John interview not made incoherent with explosions of laughter.
Yet, it's a serious time for the Derby duo. Recipients of a special
international award at the Dove Awards two years back, today the band
have momentarily put aside thoughts of the lucrative American CCM
market, started their own record company and produced the album they'd
always wanted to make, an acoustic orientated one. It's gone straight
to number one in Cross Rhythms Contemporary Chart. This then is Phil And John, 1990,
1991 and 1992.

Back in 1983 Phil And
John told the old Buzz magazine "musically we're not very good at
all". For some observers of Britain's Christian music scene, the duo's
commendable candour only expresses an inescapable fact, that these
doyens of the British Christian subculture have gained their secure
foothold in church hall and Christian fests not by musical brilliance
but a drolly laconic stage act. As recorded for posterity on their
'Live' album, Phil Baggaley and John Hartley's ability to crack up an
audience while conveying the naturalness of working class lads has
taken them a long way. But it would be unfair to write off the duo as
musical lightweights. Phil And John have worked hard at their
musical chops over the past decade. The banality of many of the early
Kingsway recordings has been long overcome and with Word (UK) they
have cut a series of goodish albums. The problem has been P&J's
stylistic lapses. The duo offered the occasionally bemused album buyer
crisp acoustic pop with 'Waiting For Summer' (1985), synth-programmed
CCM with 'Lonely Dancer' (1987) and 60s pop-rock throwback with 'Don't
Look Now It's the Hallelujah Brothers' (1989). It was the unexpected
success of 'Lonely Dancer' which pressured the duo into attempting to
recreate the synth-pop formula with 'Shine Like America' (1991). But
no more

American Christian radio hits emerged from that and, disillusioned
with their dealings with Word (UK), the duo struck out on their own
earlier this year. Now with their own booking agency (Sounds Like
Promotions) and record company (R Records, marketed into Christian
bookstores through Kingsway) and a determination to record music they
liked rather than music the market place dictated Phil And John have a new
lease of life.

Phil And John have
been mates all their lives. Childhood friends, the duo grew up in a
Nottinghamshire mining village. They began playing guitars at the age
of 13 and, though only nominally Christian, were heavily influenced by
Malcolm And Alwyn, Britain's seminal Christian music duo, and began
playing concerts to church youth groups. Their debut gig was at
Mansfield Sally Army Hall and their first album, at age 16, was called
'On The Line' and sold 60 copies!

After 10 years, what makes Phil And John get out of bed in the morning?

(John) "Well, somebody banging on the door! They've come for
breakfast! Erm, I think we keep going because we enjoy it. It's a very
good way of making a living, it's far better than going to an office
every day or a factory or something and we're very fortunate in the
fact that people still turn out to see us. That's why we carry on, I
suppose."

Let's begin again, how did you become Christians?

(John) "I first became a Christian when I was 13, but I was so
insecure then I used to ask God into my life every day. But I
reaffirmed my commitment when I was 18 when Phil and I went to a
Capenwray Bible School week. In fact, the whole of our youth
fellowship became Christians, too - we were so wild, it was
unbelievable. But that was when we all got sorted out and started
playing gospel music and sang at the talent night." (Phil) "If I
weren't a Christian, I would still be really into music, though not in
Mansfield. There are not a lot of opportunities for secular music
positions in Mansfield. It's more likely to be pigeon fancying."
(John) "As soon as we became Christians, we got asked by Capenwray
Bible to tour with them and sing for say 20 minutes before the
preacher came on. Then we did a sort of 'apprenticeship' with the
local churches in garages - where we worked with local BYFC
evangelists and it got to a stage where we were doing four or five
nights a week and it was either finish, or go full time and join with
Derby Youth For Christ." (Phil) "There was a small but guaranteed
income for the couple of years while we got on our feet a bit and
worked things out. The first three months doing schools work really
sorted us out. Before that we were up on the stage saying something
and doing something different; not totally opposite, but not living
life as we believed we should."

Well, that's a bit of your history. Let's drag the whole thing
up to 1992. Is there a good reason why you left Europe's biggest
Christian record company?

(Phil) "Yeah, it's called financial. We'd come to the end of our
contract with Word and they're up for sale at the moment so a lot of
their future plans they don't really know about, which is fine, but we
didn't want to be stuck with a record company for maybe a year, year
and a half who don't know where they're going, most of them don't know
if they're going to have jobs in a week or two, so we thought now's
the time to make a break, so we set our own little independent thing
up and just get licensing deals and it's far better." (John) "We
felt for a long while we wanted to do our own thing a little bit more
and become independent. So we've set up our own little record company,
'R Records', Phil and myself and a friend. We've licensed the album to
Kingsway. We're also going to license it to other record companies in
Europe and America."

So you're now linked with Kingsway. Does this mean a Phil And John praise
tape?

(Phil) "There's more chance of us going heavy metal than . . ." (John)
(interrupts) "Kingsway . . . just recently, they've got a new A&R
guy, whom we know really well, called Les Moir - produces a lot of
albums - we've had a chat with them about where they want it to go -
the vision, and it's very much on folky lines. They're setting up a
new folk label here and in America and it just seemed like the right
move for us to sign our album over to them. But no worship tapes, no
heavy metal, no jazz praise ... (laughter)"